Now in early access

A phone number
you can hand over.

— transfer in motion —
handover
— how it works

Three steps. No paperwork.

Traditional number porting takes two to four weeks, requires LOAs, port-out PINs, and paperwork. Lendline takes thirty seconds and one shared link.

01

Pick a number

Choose from local US, UK, Canadian, and European area codes. Activated instantly. Inbound calls and texts are ready from the first second.

02

Use it as your own

Receive calls and messages directly in your dashboard. Forward to any device. Keep the line as long as you like, or move it on whenever you decide.

03

Hand it over

One click generates a transfer link. Share it with the new owner. They claim the number, the line moves to their account, no service interruption.

— made for

When a number
needs to move on.

Phone numbers carry history. Customer relationships, contact lists, recovery accounts. When ownership changes, the number should follow.

— small business sales

Selling a small business and the line goes with it

The new owner inherits years of customer calls and texts. No need to update business cards, signage, or Google listings. The number is part of the asset.

— freelance handoffs

Handing project communications to a long-term client

Consultants and freelancers often spin up a dedicated number per engagement. When the project ends, the client takes the number to their team.

— digital asset transfers

Buying or inheriting a digital business that includes a phone line

Domains, social handles, customer databases, and the contact number all change hands together. The transfer happens in the same checkout flow.

— team transitions

Passing a contractor line to the permanent hire who replaces them

Agencies and remote teams cycle through contractors. The dedicated client-facing number stays continuous, only the human behind it changes.

— family transfers

Gifting a memorable number to a relative

A landline kept active for decades. A vanity number that spells a family name. Pass it on to the next generation without it being lost to a carrier pool.

— estate handovers

Settling an estate that includes ongoing service lines

When a sole proprietor or freelancer passes a business on, the line of contact often outlasts the original owner. Lendline keeps it operational.

— pricing

Honest and transparent.

No setup fees. No porting fees. No surprise transfer charges. Cancel any time. The number stays yours, and is yours to give.

— questions

Things people often ask.

How does the transfer actually work?
From your dashboard, select the number and click Transfer. Lendline generates a unique link you can share by email, text, or any messenger. The recipient opens the link, signs in (or creates an account in seconds), confirms, and the number moves to their account. No service interruption. No paperwork.
Does the new owner see my old messages?
By default, no. Message and call history stays with the previous owner. If both parties agree (for example, when selling a business with customer history), the previous owner can export and share the conversation log separately, or grant the new owner access from the transfer screen.
What types of communication can I receive on my Lendline number?
Lendline numbers receive standard inbound calls and text messages from your customers, clients, and contacts. The line is intended for legitimate business and personal communication. Use of the service is governed by our Acceptable Use Policy.
What happens if the recipient declines the transfer?
The number stays in your account. Transfer links expire after 7 days if not claimed. You can revoke a pending transfer at any time before it is accepted.
Is there a fee to transfer a number?
No. Transfers are free, included in every plan. The new owner picks up billing from the day they accept the transfer.
Can I port my Lendline number out to another carrier?
Yes. Lendline numbers are real US/UK/CA/EU numbers and are portable to any major carrier under FCC and equivalent local rules. There is no fee from us to port out.

The number is yours.
And yours to give.

Get your first line